Smoking guns close Compton store

When felons walked into Boulevard Sales and Service, a fortress-like gun store in Compton, they weren't turned away. Instead, law enforcement officials said they were coached.

Can't pass the background check? No problem, as long as they had a friend who could.

On Thursday, federal authorities who were working with state and local law enforcement officials shut down the operation, arresting the son of the longtime owners and an employee, and seizing thousands of weapons and rounds of ammunition at the Compton store and a sister operation near Ojai in Ventura County.

The raids put at least a temporary end to a retail gun outlet that authorities said had provided a steady stream of weapons used in crimes or possessed by felons not legally allowed to own them.

No other California gun dealer had more crime guns traced back to their stores than Boulevard Sales and Service in the last two years, according to federal firearms records.

Over the last five years, 892 weapons were traced to the store on Long Beach Boulevard by law enforcement officials who were investigating crimes, authorities said. Five others were traced to the sister store in Oak View. Twenty-eight guns were tied to homicide investigations, including the attempted murder of a law enforcement officer.

"The business we believe acted in concert with gang members and felons," said Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Special Agent in Charge John A. Torres, as agents behind him stacked some of the more than 2,000 weapons that were being removed from the gun store.

Torres said Boulevard Sales and Service guns had been sold to members of gangs such as the Compton Crips and Fruit Town Pirus.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca and top Los Angeles Police Department officials called the Compton sting a starting point in their plan to aggressively shut down gun retailers whose weapons disproportionately end up being used by gang members, an effort that they said would be a cornerstone of their joint anti-gang campaign that was launched earlier this year.

"Today is a new day in our effort to tell gang members your efforts to acquire guns will be reduced," said Baca, who vowed to continue to trace weapons that are recovered by his deputies and investigate high-volume sources of such guns. His department had not used that tactic in the past.

Officials who worked on the two-month-long sting described a bold sales strategy inside the long controversial store, which the Rev. Jesse Jackson, during his 1988 presidential campaign, cited as a ready source of Soviet-made AK-47 semiautomatic rifles and Israeli Uzi submachine guns for anyone who had "cash money on Long Beach Boulevard."

In Compton, some residents who remembered Jackson's words wondered why it had taken so long for authorities to act.

"Look how many years it took," said Roscoe Pettway, 42. "All [the owner] did was put guns on the street. All these people getting killed. They should have listened."

When authorities began investigating the store in January, they alleged, a pattern of illegal sales was immediately apparent.

Convicted felons who were working as confidential informants entered the store, talking openly of past prison stints.

Investigators said store workers "coached" them to use a friend or girlfriend who could clear federally required background checks. Such sales, known as "straw" buys, are illegal.

In many instances, according to a sworn affidavit, the admitted felon counted the cash out of his own pocket in front of store employees. Fourteen such sales took place over the last 60 days, officials alleged.

"The informant would look at the gun and say [to his friend], 'I want that gun; you buy it for me,' " said John D'Angelo, the ATF agent who supervised the sting. "We had to show that the clerks knew exactly what was going on, and we had no problems doing so."

On one occasion, authorities said, an undercover LAPD officer who was posing as a felon's girlfriend hesitated over a question on federally required paperwork that asked if she was the "actual buyer" of the gun. The question came with a warning against acquiring weapons for other people.

According to an affidavit that detailed the investigation's findings, store employee Carlos Rodriguez Castellanos urged her to simply answer yes. If she didn't, Castellanos allegedly told her, "you not getting nothing."

The alleged "straw" sales included high-caliber handguns, a Glock .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol, a pump-action shotgun and a bolt-action rifle with a telescopic sight. Large quantities of ammunition, including three cases of AK-47-type bullets, also were alleged to have been sold to straw buyers.

In one case, federal agents said, an undercover LAPD detective wondered out loud if he should report the gun stolen to avoid getting into trouble. According to papers filed in court, Ann Virgilio, who owns the stores with her husband, Michael Virgilio, agreed that reporting the gun as stolen would be a good idea.